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BackWith Kyle locking top seed, search for drama begins (cont'd)

That is the final race before the Chase. Going into this Sunday's race at Michigan, a mere 107 points separate Denny Hamlin in ninth place from Bowyer in 13th (both Hamlin and Greg Biffle, who is in 10th, have accumulated 2,689 points to date, but Hamlin has the edge because he has the one aforementioned race victory and Biffle has none). David Ragan, sitting in 14th but only 67 points behind Bowyer and 89 out of 12th, also could be a factor and make the Chase at the expense of a bigger name.

Owner's Standings

Positions 30-37
Pos. Car Driver Points
30. #01 Regan Smith 1784
31. #7 Robby Gordon 1770
32. #22 Dave Blaney 1767
33. #55 Michael Waltrip 1682
34. #77 Sam Hornish Jr. 1674
35. #84 A.J. Allmendinger 1669
36. #00 Michael McDowell 1661
37. #66 Scott Riggs 1638
• Complete Standings click here

Others who appear to be locks to make the Chase need to go even more aggressively after wins the next four weeks to make certain Busch doesn't pad his bonus-point account even further. (Each race victory is worth 10 bonus points with the playing field otherwise being leveled after the first 26 races). All in all, that still could make for some interesting and highly entertaining racing the next four events -- a sign that the Chase is doing its job in a year when Kyle Busch's dominance otherwise would have reduced the season to a complete snoozefest.

Last but maybe not least

The other battle to keep an eye on -- less interesting to all but those engaged in it, for they are fiercely slugging it out -- is being waged around the Top 35 cutoff line. The top 35 teams in owner points are assured starting spots in the first five races for next season, and this is ultra important as many of the teams involved are still scrambling to find full-time sponsorship for their cars for next season.

It's tough to sell a product that might not even be in the season-opening show. And if you're not in the top 35 in owner's points at the end of the 2008 season, there is no guarantee that you'll be in the 2009 Daytona 500 that is considered the best exposure of the season for sponsors.

It's also tough to sell this struggle for mediocrity as something fans are all that interested in. And while it is a weekly sub-plot, it doesn't change one iota whether it's a regular-season race or a Chase race -- so most of those not directly involved in it won't even pay it much serious attention until the season finale at Homestead on Nov. 16.

Still, for teams like the No. 55 and No. 00 Toyotas owned by Michael Waltrip Racing, the No. 77 Dodge owned by Penske Racing, the No. 84 Toyota owned by Red Bull Racing, and the No. 66 Chevrolet owned currently by Haas/CNC Racing but to be taken over by the new Stewart-Haas operation at year's end, the fight to stay in the top 35 can take on a life-or-death struggle kind of feel.

Let's just hope that Kyle Busch isn't so good in the final 10 races that watching how the top 35 shapes up for the beginning of next season isn't the top storyline in NASCAR as this campaign winds down.

Nothing against Kyle, mind you. That simply sounds not only boring but, honestly, way too predictable based on how the season has unfolded so far.

The opinions expressed are solely those of the writer

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